At 63, soap star-turned-pop star Rick Springfield proved rock and roll doesn’t have to be a young man’s game as he turned in an energetic concert Friday night at Andiamo Celebrity Showroom in Warren.

The Australian native lured a full-house crowd to their feet from his opening number and kept them there through a 75-minute set that included a crisp performance of all of his 1980s hits.

Springfield’s live shows have a pair of trademark features that he included on Friday.

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The first is whipping tossed flower bouquets against the bottom end of his guitar strings that sends the petals and buds flying into the waiting hands of fans in the first few rows. This happens several times in the show.

“I feel like a ballerina with all of these flowers up here,” he said of the rose petals littering the stage and front tables.

Another unique aspect is his venture into the audience sans security. At Stars & Stripes in Mount Clemens back in 2011, he actually jumped onto the main floor and did a lap around the front section of seats before returning to the stage.

At Andiamo -- where the main floor is packed with tables and chairs not conducive to a brisk walk -- he walked on the seats of chairs of standing fans into the audience during “Human Touch.” He demonstrated a ballerina’s grace moving from chair to chair, with people holding their hands up to guide him. More than one female fan made a playful grab at his leg or other body parts as he passed by.

Showmanship aside, most fans came to see his live versions the songs that came out in the 1980s, the same time frame he portrayed Dr. Noah Drake on the afternoon soap “General Hospital.”

And he delivered.

He turned in solid performances of “I’ve Done Everything for You,” “Affair of the Heart,” “Don’t Talk to Strangers,” and “Jessie’s Girl.”

Hardly going through the motions, the wiry Springfield seems energized by the crowd’s enthusiasm, The only time he slowed the pace was during an acoustic set which contained a touching tribute to his father in “My Father’s Chair.”

His set included a cover of “Jet” by Paul McCartney & the Wings, a rousing version of the blues standard “Crossroads,” and selections from last year’s “Songs for the End of the World.” One song was prefaced by his warning that the planet is doomed if “we’re going to keep on polluting the place.”

Springfield closed with “Jessie’s Girl” before returning for an encore with the Beatles’ “All My Loving” and another of his 80s hits, “Kristina.”

Fans who have seen Springfield perform in years past said he has showed no signs of slowing down.

“He was fantastic,” said Dave Rubello of St. Clair Shores, who attended with his wife, Greta Guest. “What a performance.”

Opening for Springfield, Canadian singer-songwriter Jody Raffoul received an enthusiastic reception for his acoustic set of cover tunes and original music. Raffoul is a favorite on the local nightclub scene.